The Hawaii Infrared Parallax Program. II. Young Ultracool Field Dwarfs
Michael C. Liu (IfA/Hawaii), Trent J. Dupuy (UT Austin), and Katelyn, N. Allers (Bucknell)

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive analysis of young ultracool dwarfs using new IR parallaxes, revealing their photometric properties, population distinctions, and implications for age and physical characteristics.
Contribution
It offers the first uniform analysis of young ultracool dwarfs with high-precision parallaxes, establishing empirical young isochrones and clarifying population differences.
Findings
VL-G dwarfs form a distinct sequence in IR color-magnitude diagrams.
Young objects show magnitude offsets compared to field dwarfs, especially in Y and J bands.
The frequency of VL-G objects decreases with age.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present a large, uniform analysis of young (~10-150 Myr) ultracool dwarfs, based on new high-precision IR parallaxes for 68 objects. We find that low-gravity (VL-G) late-M and L dwarfs form a continuous sequence in IR color-magnitude diagrams, separate from field objects and current theoretical models. VL-G objects also appear distinct from young substellar (brown dwarf and exoplanet) companions, suggesting the two populations have a different range of physical properties. In contrast, at the L/T transition, young, old, and peculiar objects all span a narrow range in near-IR absolute magnitudes. At a given spectral type, the IR absolute magnitudes of young objects can be offset from ordinary field dwarfs, with the largest offsets occurring in the Y and J bands for late-M dwarfs (brighter than the field) and mid/late-L dwarfs (fainter than the field). Overall, low-gravity…
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